1 / 21

The Design of an Electronic Bicycle Monitor (EBM)

The Design of an Electronic Bicycle Monitor (EBM). Team P118: Gary Berglund Andrew Gardner Emrys Maier Ammar Mohammad. Introduction. Relevance to Dr. Gibbs Available systems Commercial ‘off the shelf’ Phone apps Electric Bicycle Monitor (EBM) Integration Weight Power efficient

shanae
Download Presentation

The Design of an Electronic Bicycle Monitor (EBM)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Design of an Electronic Bicycle Monitor (EBM) Team P118: Gary Berglund Andrew Gardner Emrys Maier Ammar Mohammad

  2. Introduction Relevance to Dr. Gibbs Available systems Commercial ‘off the shelf’ Phone apps Electric Bicycle Monitor (EBM) Integration Weight Power efficient Context of use

  3. Requirements Display Speed, ~20 mph max Odometer Trip Distance Maximum speed Average speed Peak current Time and Date GPS position data (latitude, longitude, altitude) Battery voltage, 35 V to 40 V Battery current, up to 30 A A·hr consumption since last charge W·hr consumption since last charge Record GPS position data for external use

  4. System Block Diagram Caption for visual aid(s)

  5. Mechanics Disassembled Garmin Nuvi 1490 Other Option Considered Standard enclosure Current status Donor case from Garmin Roadblocks Physical constants PCB limit 3 1/8” X 2 ½” SMT parts

  6. Touch Display Other Option Considered Two Row LCD Current status Donor LCD from Garmin Innoluxmodel AT043TN24 Major roadblocks Obtaining supporting documentation Implementing interface Drop-dead date: not defined yet Backup Plan Source another LCDas standby

  7. Removable Memory Other options Considered USB drive USB cable Current Status SD card Type not known Roadblocks Implementing interface

  8. Battery + ADC MCU Amp Battery Voltage Sensor Reference - Internal to EBM Options ADC (8-bit ~ 0.156 V, 10-bit ~ 0.039 V) Differential amplifier Voltage Divider

  9. Battery Current Sensor External to EBM In-line with the battery positive terminal Outputs analog value for ADC directly Options Hall Effect sensor Shunt resistor Example of a Hall Effect current sensor. Image from: http://machinedesign.com/sensors/sensor-sense-hall-effect-current-sensors

  10. Magnetic pickup Possible Magnet Locations Wheel Speed Sensor External to EBM Sends pulses to MCU Options Magnetic pickup Optical Roadblocks Reliability Environment Vibration

  11. Power Supply Requirements 35-40V operational range Battery system provided Automatic shutdown voltage Voltage/current sensing Multiple voltage levels Display (12V?) Sensors (5V?) Microcontroller (3.3V?) Memory modules (1.8V?) GPS module (1.8V?)

  12. Power Supply Options Voltage Divider Easy Minimal parts Inefficient Poor regulation Linear Regulator Small footprint Minimal parts Good regulation Inefficient DC-DC Converter Complicated Multiple parts Noisy Poor regulation Efficient

  13. Power Supply Combination DC-DC step down High efficiency (~90%) Noisy LDO filter Stabilize noise Well regulated LDO step down Even better regulation Even better filtering Less efficiency (~70%) Voltage Step Down Scheme

  14. GPS Specifications: Operation voltage Starting time Interference type Size Price Internal Vs. External Antenna GPS Receiver - EM-506 https://www.sparkfun.com/products/12751

  15. Microcontroller Inputs and outputs Interface protocol SPI, I2C, or UART Number of ADC bits Program memory size uC architecture 8 bit Vs. 16 bit Different Microcontrollers http://creativeelectron.net/blog/2009/09/mcucommon-controllers-pin-configuration/

  16. Testing Each subsystem will be tested individually Divided into three parts: Testing magnetic trigger using regular bike Testing power system, voltage sensor, and current sensor using a power supply Other subsystem can be tested individually without any external parts Final prototype will be tested using Dr. Gibbs’ electric bike

  17. Project Management Meeting: Bi-weekly with Dr. Gibbs (every other Thursday) Weekly with group members Documentation Shared folder to organized documents (Google Drive) Document naming convention for convenient access Tasks: Divided into subsystems Each subsystem includes: choosing components, designing circuit schematics, PCB, and programming Overlapping responsibility to help with system integration

  18. “Wrap Up” Plan (very early) Project Timeline (Preliminary)

  19. Powerpoint Slide Assignments Weekly Goals

  20. Budget Currently unknown, but relevant at every step in the design process Safely assumed at less than $1000 in components No upper limit specified by sponsor Will factor into component selection

  21. Conclusion/Questions

More Related